May renew attempts to push through her Brexit plan Taiwan mulls death penalty for drunk driving
LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May will renew attempts to push through her Brexit plan, after she dramatically offered to quit to save her deal and MPs failed in their own bid to break the deadlock.
At risk of losing control of the process of leaving the European Union, the leader announced she would resign if parliament finally backed her withdrawal agreement.
The offer came just hours before the House of Commons took part in an unprecedented series of votes to seek an alternative plan – but all eight proposals failed to find a majority, highlighting divisions among MPs.
Brexit minister Steve Barclay said the outcome ‘strengthens our view that the deal our government has negotiated is the best option'.
MPs have twice rejected May's Brexit deal, both times by large majorities, prompting the leader to announce what is expected to be her final offer.
“I know there is a desire for a new approach – and new leadership – in the second phase of the Brexit negotiations and I won't stand in the way of that,” she told a packed meeting of her Conservative MPs.
“But we need to get the deal through and deliver Brexit. I am prepared to leave this job earlier than I intended in order to do what is right for our country and our party.”
There are signs of softening among her rebel MPs, with a number of Eurosceptics performing a U-turn including former foreign secretary Boris Johnson – a likely contender to replace May – who told fellow MPs on Wednesday he would support the deal.
But her offer may not be enough to win round some hardliners, including a group of Conservatives reported to call themselves ‘The Spartans' who are still holding out – as is the Democratic Unionist Party, the Northern Irish party which props up May's government.
The DUP says the ‘backstop' plan in the deal to keep open the border with EU member Ireland after Brexit poses an ‘unacceptable threat' to the United Kingdom's political union. The opposition Labour and Scottish National parties are also against the deal.
Britain's Daily Mail newspaper questioned whether her ‘sacrifice' would be in vain while the Guardian called her resignation offer ‘a stitch-up for a bad deal'.
The newspaper summed up her offer with the headline ‘Back me and sack me,' adding that she had ignited a Conservative Party leadership contest. — AFP TAIPEI: Taiwan plans to ramp up punishments for those who cause a fatal accident while drunk driving, including the death penalty for the most egregious cases, sparking an outcry from abolition and rights groups.
The cabinet yesterday approved a draft amendment to the Criminal Code that would make death by drunk driving an indictable murder offence, potentially punishable by death if the deed is deemed 'intentional', officials said.
The proposal needs parliamentary approval but comes after a spate of high profile deaths that have generated widespread outrage. Currently the maximum sentence in Taiwan for causing a death while drunk behind the wheel is 10 years.
The new proposal would increase jail sentences for repeat offenders who commit a new offence within five years of their first conviction. They face up to a life sentence for causing a death and 12 years for grave injuries.
“Cases of drunk driving leading to death are rampant... drink drivers recklessly caused accidents that took lives and destroyed families to result in irreparable regret,” the Justice Ministry said in a statement. — AFP